TSm tft' n EVENING JTULfir LKDCJCu-l'UlLAUELPHIA, THURSDAY, XtViiJER 70 -o, 1010 ror?rjwifJji ' $- A if u. L T IV- V K- m Cuentng "Public ledger PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY , CTriUP II. K. CUIITI8. rrsnFvr Chsrln It I.uJIntrlpn Vim Pr'cliinl'.Tnlin O Msrtln. Syrrlarv and Treasurers lhlllp fl Collins. John H. Williams, John J. Kpurgeon, Directors. " "EIUfoniAiniOAllIl" Cvnis H. K. dims, Chairman JUVID E. SMILET Kdllor JOHN C. MAItTI.V. , . Qcncrnl Business Manager Published dally nl Piano I.nitn nulldlnff. inurprnuc Atlantic Cut . Independcneo Suu.lrc. Philadelphia In ClTT ... Pre,. 1'iiJnii TtnlMlnv iS SE1V VonK . . L-IHI Melrnnnlltun TniiM nTTtniT 701 Tord nulldlnr Bt. l,nus. ions nuierton Iliiltdlne CIIICAOO 1302 Tribune nulMlnj m:vb r.rnn,rs WASHINGTON tltlH-'l . ." 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All lights of republication of .special dis patches herein etc also reserved. Philadelphia, Thimday. 'Wenihfr 13. 1019 A DEMOCRATIZED ORCHESTRA? rpHB million or more contiibuted to the endowment fund of the Philadelphia Orchestra will prove to be the best in vestment ever made by.thc people of this cit if it can bo used to make the Ren eia! public better acquainted with Mr. Stokowski's organization nnd its woiU. The orchestia interprets a literature as rich and various as anythinp written in books. Music of the sort that endures is like light. It illuminates- times and motives that are past and it is filled with meaning, glorious and profound, for any one who knows how much there is in life and in human aspirations that words cannot express. No one ought to be shut away from it. Yet circumstances beyond the control of the orchestia and its directors have created an atmosphere of exclusiveness about the Academy con certs. The number of people who can buy season tickets is relatively small. So the rank and file were left to fare as they could in the queue line and the upper balconies. Even now it is difficult to suggest a ( manner in which the orchestra may make itself genet ally heard and understood. But Doctor Hart and the others asso ciated with him in the effort to use the new endowment fund to the best advan tage hope to find a way and we wish them luck. Orchestra leaders have always found it s, difficult to reach grounds of common un derstanding with what are called popular audiences. It is apparent at times that they make a mistake in the attempt to play down to the multitudes. The multi tude is far from lacking feeling and a critical sense. It will swiftly reject whatever is dull and pretentious. Yet it , has little sympathy with the shabby and hackneyed music that too often fil's out so-called popular programs. If there are to be great public concerts in this city they ought to include compositions that ,are dignified and impressive. Music of 1 the sort likely to be of exclusive interest to the technicians ought o be left for cither times. SUGAR 'CUGAR is a food. It is not a luxury. When it is withheld the people are left without an important commodity that cannot be dispensed with without some thought of the consequent effects upon general health. Sugar is now no more scarce in Europe than it is here, where most of it is pro duced and refined. Vast quantities have been exported in recent months. While Europe is in want any talk of embargoes on food from the United States may not sound pleasant. But if the sugar short age continues the public will demand a fuller explanation than any yet offered and Congress will be required to correct a situation that involves undue hardships for the country, while it permits at least some producers to demand prices far be yond any ever contemplated before. It is all very well to help Europe. But the welfare work of the government is it little like charity. It ought to begin at home. GENERAL PRICE ON MILITARISM "NJO ONE familiar with the record of the Twenty-eighth Division, or the Pennsylvania National Guard, would call General William G. Price either a paci fist or an amateur in military science. What General Price said when he brought up the question of compulsory military training for discussion at the American Legion convention in Minne apoTis is therefore authoritative and of interest not only to Pennsylvania, but to the whole country. He charged that there is a lobby inspired by the army general staff to institute an "un-American" system of compulsory military training under government direction. The army staff doubtless is sincere and intent merely on getting military effi ciency of a high order without regard to methods. That is what army staffs are for. In other quarters there is noticeable enthusiasm for compulsory training sys tems of a peculiarly drastic sort, and not all of it is inspired by patriotism or a i-ense of duty. Before long the country will have to decide how and to what extent it wishes to prepare for war. And the peop?e, deluged as they will be with propaganda of a peculiarly subtle sort, ought nlways to remember that military training in the future, if it is organized upoh a large scale, will not be like mili tary training of the past. More wilj be j-cquired than a few guns and a field to iril in. The military organization of the future will have men and guns as mere inci dentals. Training will have to be based upon vast and elaborate systems of artil lery, tanks, dirigibles, airplanes, gas and chemical machinery and all the rest of the devices, perfected and In contempla tion, 'that science has evolved for pur- . -rS t .1-. ..... TV.-4 A ! PUUV-VI UeqUUBMUII, UHUH Ui CIJUIJ) ment is highly expensive and it is highly profitable to the makers. Any extended system of military preparation will here after be almost as expensive bs war itself in money alone. It will remove vast numbers of young men from schools and from productive employment for long periods. Some such costly alternatives may be necessary and even imperative later along. But for the time being the nation ought to be permitted to look clearly at both sides of the question and to decide according to its needs nnd not nccording to the desiresif selfish or emotional cliques. General Price nnd any one else who continues to keep the whole general ques tion of future preparedness out in tho light is doing a Service to the country. GOVERNMENT NOT TO BE AN INDUSTRIAL BUREAUCRACY J Congress Is Turning Its Back on Public Ownership Plans and Harking Back to Sound Americanism 'TWERE is most gratifying evidence - that Congress has nbandoned its hos pitable attitude toward government ownership plans. Not so very long ago the advocates of progressive government socialism were listened to on the floor of the House with curiosity, if not always with respect, and there were men in high executive offices who favored government purchase of the lailroads and telegraph and telephone lines, and now nnd then some one advo cated the nationalization of the mines and the oil wells. Indeed, less than ten days ago former Senator Jim Ham Lewis, of Illinois, expressed the opinion that the President in his annual message to Con gress would advocate this soit of na tionalization. But Congress responds to public senti ment nlmost as quickly as a chameleon changes color when it changes its en viionment. It is now considering two bills, one dealing with the return of the railroads to their owners and the other adjusting the relation of the government to the merchant marine, vhich under other circumstances might have con tained very different provisions. During the debate on the railroad bill no one was so lash as to advocate the Plumb plan for government purchase of the railroads in order that the employes might operate them. Sentiment was a?most unanimous in favor of the with drawal of the government from all direct connection with the operation of the roads at the earliest possible date. Chairman Esche, of the railroad com mittee, remarked in the course of his speech that after hearing the proponents of the Plumb plan "we were more con vinced than ever that government own ership will not and ought not to be the solution of the railroad problem." Every one who denounced the Plumb plan was applauded by both sides of the House. The experiment with government operation of the railroads during the war hasrevidently convinced the country that it has had enough of this sort of thing and Congress is merely reflecting the sentiment of the people when it advances arguments in favor of the abandonment of government operation. The attitude of the House toward the merchant mnrine is even more signifi cant. For several years we have been told that the only way by which the American flag could be restored to the sea was through the operation of ships by the government over routes neglected by private capital. Even if the ships were not operated by the government, we were told, thev should be owned by it and leased at such a rate as would en able the lessee to make a profit. We have had experience with govern ment construction of merchant ships during the war. A shipping board was created, great shipyards were built nnd we have turned out several million tons of merchant vessels. The time has come to adjust the shipping policy of the gov ernment to peace conditions and what do we see? Is Congress preparing to continue the shipyards and to make the shipping board a permanent institution? Nothing of the kind. The committee on merchant marine of the House has drafted n bil! dealing with the situation. There are twenty-one members on the committee representing both parties. Its bill is now before the House. Chairman Greene, of the committee, explained the other day that the bill had the unanimous support of every member of the commit tee. Former Chairman Alexander, a Democrat, to whom the duty of explain ing its provisions was delegated, said: The fitst nupstion the r-ommittop was (ailed upon to iletprniiup was tho present nnd ftituip policy of thp 1'nitPil Stntes with rpfprpiicp to this vast flppt that h, hhnulil it be permanently owned nnd operated lij the government or should it ro into private ownership and operation? The committee in Section .'! undertakes to indicate to the shippiiiK board the policy of ConRress with rpfsnrd to thii gieat fleet of merchant vessels, and, if it is ngreed to. to declare that these vessels shall ro into private ownership and operation as soon ns practicable. In other words, that we shall develop tho American merehnnt marine under private ownership ns a per manent policy of the government. Nothing could be clearer or more ex plicit than the final sentence of this statement. When one reflects that this expresses the well-considered conviction of all the Republicans and air the Demo crats on the committee one is forced to the conclusion that government owner ship of a merchant fleet is a dead issue. The bill continues the life of he ship ping board for five years, it is true, but that is in order that it may complete the ships now under construction and may have time to dispose of the whole fleet on advantageous terms. As to the nationalization of the mines, the settlement of the coal strike by fed eral interference seems to indicate that we have about all the nationalization that we need in order to keep the mines in operation. Government in the immediate future is apparently to confine itself to govern ing that is, it is going to preserve order and protect the worker and the employer from unjust and indefensible interference and it is going to insure to every one the enjoyment of the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happi- ncss. This harking back to the great principles formulated by the statesmen who 6et up our political institutions is most encouraging to all believers in genuine democracy. Emphasis is likely to be laid on the importance of insisting on equal rights for nil wjthout special privileges for any, and all the incentives to individual en terprise are to be preserved so that every industry may be developed to the fullest" possible extent and so that the men with ability may receive adequate rewards for their initiative, breadth of vision and commercial courage. Our political democracy is not to be superseded by an industrial bureaucracy. The experiments made during the war have made this certain beyond the shadow of a doubt. A YOUNG IDEA SHOOTS A new relationship mut be realized between the employer nnd the employe in puhlic service corporations. Kntli woikers own a dnh to the people Hut it is equally plnin Hint the ppople one a special duty to them. Uefoie we become many jenis oldei the (Jovern ment of the I'nited Slates will cieatp courts with iiiithmity to en force their decrees: courts of equity anil iustlre to settle these controversies Kranklln I). Roosevelt, assistant sccie tnry of the navy, in nn nddrpss to the Knight of Columbus in this city. JT CHEERS us to see Mr. Roosevelt move to p place in the growing com pany of big nnd little stntcsmen who ap pear to have made themselves familiar with h suggestion repeated at frequent intervals on this page within the rast few weeks, while almost everybody was too busy damning one side or other in the strike controversy to recognize the fact that patience, justice nnd an hon orable l cgard for the rights of both par ties in industry require far moie than a surface study of labor unrest and its causes. Mr. Roosevelt echoes the belief expressed in these columns when the steel strike was called. The logic of the argument is clear. Labor organizations on the one hand and the men who direct great industries like the mines and rail systems on the other have achieved a sort of power and in fluence thnt the general public cannot regard without some misgivings, es pecially when it is' apparent that differ ences ike those existing in the coal fields are to be left to settlement hv dovnstnt. ing trials of strength and methods of attrition applied to the country at large. Strikes nnd lockouts do not assure justice to anybody. They give victory and advantage only to the strongest. The wrongs and grievances that may animate one side or the other are never intelligently scrutinized. It is no won der that we have begun to talk of indus trial barbarism. Congress, for the benefifof tho country and Its safety, will have to set up a now" code of industrial relationships and define new mornl and legal principles wHich labor or capital may not violate in the future without inviting public condem nation and disgrace. Then we shall be rid of strikes. The accident of poverty will not serve to weaken the case of men who strive for living wages and the right to care de cently for their children. Nor will fanatical agitators again find it possible to threaten the industrinl fn r tu country with disorganization and paral ysis. , The fight of the di- h.iil In the rector of the I'enn- Orlglnal Package s.vlvnnin Bureau of ., ,. Fon"s against the Colder bill, now pending in the United htntes Senate, deserves the serious atten tion of the public and the public's enmest backing. Not nil the states have bpen so careful as the Keystone State in securing for thp people good food for good money. The Colder bill, which makes interstate com merce n party to adulteration, will, if passed, nullify all the good the state has done in this direction. Wnodbu ry, X. J., There Ain't hienks into the news No Such Place because i t s servant girls, who are receiv ing double the wages they lereiverl a year ago, are demanding mote. Hut the town that will merit first -page display is the town that has no servant ghl problem. Only on the 'hvpoth- Tlme Will esis that wnr has Bring Sanity made them mad can one understand why Fienchmen should cry "I.ong live I.enine!" nnd "I.ong live the bodies:-' ns tloy are reported to have done nt Dortan, a 'small industrial town in France. Lloyd fieoige is said to have made n pledge to Kionccsco ltn D'Aununzin to Ise Ills Job .... t h n t t h e Adriatic question will be settled in a wov consistent with the honor of Italy ami the'interests of nil the Allies. John Q. Compromise is about to get in his licks. -. . Delegates to the in- No Compromise ternutionnl labor con- Wlth Evil ference are undecided whether to favor the acceptance of the pence oiler of the Russian soviet government. Amu icons who have had experience with the miud-workings of soviet believers in this country will suffer no Indecision. Perhaps the shooting of four frilled Stnlei soldiers by I. V. V. snipers iu Cen tralia. Wash., may help the international labor conference to decide whether or not to favor he acceptance of the peace offer of the Russian soviet government. The offer and the shots come fiom the same hiand of "lefonner." Life Is just one menacing tiling after another. It was the Hun in U1S: it is the Red in 1019. Herbert. Hoover's words nie as direct as his deeds. The Poles of Uuffalo now Know exactly where lie stands. A smait slap on the wrist by the Fed eral Reserve Hoard is sufficient to,keep Wall btreet from hysterics. Hot heads nnd soro heads may balk nt resuming work in the mines, but cool heads and clear heads will lead the way. "They walked right out and turned around nnd walked right in again." The political dopesters are busy In Charleston, 8. C. "Back to the mines I" THE GOWNSMAN Hamlet TTH Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson's W delightful "dlscoiiisps" on Shnkespenre nnd Mr. Walter Hampden's recent imper sonation of the piocrastinatlng Dane in this city, no one can question the coliteinpo rnneousness of Hnmlet. As to Sir Johnston, he mny be said to levolve in the orbit of Hnmlet and this Is said in ndmlrntion, not In disdain. For Sir Jolmslon hns mane Hnmlet in n sense his own, In n relilcarna tlon which extends back through "hi lnnter,"' ns he has cnllec! him, 'Samuel Phelps, to Xlacreadj, the Keinbles nnd to (inrrick himself, to lose itself In n deeper past. As the (iownsmnn listened the other evening to (he familiar speech to the players, pronounced without nffectation or man nerisni nnd ns If It wpip the easiest thing iu Hip world, he could not but feel thnt here Is the realization iu practice of Shakcspeare'n own simple and sensible ndviec wherein he warns how things "overdone" nre "fiom the pin pose of plining" nnd pleads for "the mirror held up to nnliiie." Sir Johnston's l.nglish is a delight, for there is no mouth ing In it. no trace of a localism nor of man neiisni. In listening Ic. Sir Henry Inlng. years ngo. we were always sensible, great ns was his art, that this yas Sir Henry Irving impel scuintiiig Hnmlet. With Sir Johnston, the other evening, neither the convention of evening ilothes. most iin-Hnmletlikp of habiliments, nor perilous piny with a pincc lie, could disabuse Us of the conviction that here was file veritable Hamlet. pO.MPARISO.VS are odious and generally finite giotiiitous. The (iownsmnn has not been so fin Innate as to see Mr. Ilnmp ilen this time; but he remembers his Hamlet of a year ngo null n vivid and mostMiappy impression icmnins. If Sir Johnston I'm lies-Robertson icpiesents the English tiaililion, harking back to (intrirk: Mr lliimpilen -.tnnds be if said to his credit for (lie tindition of our American Booth nnd Forrest befoie him, The Cinwnsmnn, ns n hoi. was raised on the Ilooth Hamlet To him. Hamlet's was the dark, saturnine face of a man bordering on the elderly, black of hnir, nve for n grizzling on the temples, of n dignified, graceful figure, deep melan choly voice, volntile'in his clinic of mood, iust a bit dare it be said? thpatrlc, sus tained nlways with n subconscious sense of lu's rank ns n prince nnd to perpetrate an anti-climax, usually abominably supported. Mr. Hampden's is a lomnntic. n beautiful Hamlet. He looks thp part according to thp Ilootli Ilamlpt tradition. He is younger fnr than the (iownsninn'N late recollection of Ilnoth. ns lithe, ns graceful, as melancholy, as sonorously musical in the rendition of i his lines, , QOMF.IIODY has written interestingly nbout the grand manner of Shnkespenre nnd Mr. Shaw has stuck his tongue in his cheek ns to all this nlifpomp nnd circum stance. Sir Johnston called attention the other evening to the large proportion of prose employed by Shakespeare, not only in Hnmlet which contains n great deal but throughout the plays, and he mndc the point onp never too frequently to be emphasized that the poetry of the play does not flicker in and out with the verse, in a word thnt the prose is often nn les poetical than the verse. Thcer is n poeticnl glamour over thp whole of thp Shnkesppoipan age. a glamour which exists to us not only because we see it nfnr off. but because the lomnntic way of looking nt things was the prevalent one in thnt time. Such an agp expressed itself 1 in its own language and that language is habitually imaginative because such was the habit of its thought. To object to the grand manner of Shakespeare is to quarrel about the ruffs, the flowered doublets and the llhen stomachers of old time. TTAMLET, the greatest of tragedies, is - written like nil the serious plays of Shnkcspeare, in the grand manner. Its scenes are gorgeous with the colors of the imagination and glittering with wit nnd with fancy. It is emphatically the story of a prince; and the poet hns raised the petty little castle of Klsinnr with everything in it to the heights of nny poetic dilation to which your mind can follow him. But all this, like the robes of the king or the staff of office of Polonlus, is but the trapping, the garniture, not the essence of the piny. Hamlet does not move us because he Is a prince, but because he is a man, We are not so much concerned with his loss of a kingdom perhaps ns may have been the Eliznbethnns, but we are equally concerned with the terrible forfeit which he must pay for his fatal proerastinacy, his indecision of soul ; for, ns Kir Johnston happily reminded lis, we are all procrastinators. tTTTHRREFORR the . C.ownsmnn would ' modestly state his preference for a Hnmlet, natural, not grandiose, simple in the complexity of his mood, not complex in his simplicity. Hnmlet is a man who 1ins seen n ghost in an age which believes in ghosts not nn age in which Sir Oliver Lodge believes in ghosts nnd Sir Conan Doyle but the age of a general belief in this manifestation of the supernnturnl. The sight of his .father's spirit, wondering out of purgatory, has given Hamlet a state of nerves, it has unhinged him nobody in liis own wits believes Hamlet to have been out of hi and n man witli n stntf of nerves Is ns open to impressions as nn Aeolinn harp is to evpry zpphyr .No man should be allow rd to act Hamlet--no man can really act Hamlet who is not a gentleman to his finger tips. And this ciioumstnncc makes the disturbance of bis equilibrium so very much more terrible nnd touching. He puts nn antic disposition on. but he is ns he ex presses it "tickle o' the tere," readily nettled, and the senility of Polonitm irritates him, the spying Rosenkianz and fiildenstern exasperates him: Ophelia, whom he loved, caught in a lie, maddens him, nnd the bombastic grief of Laertes drives him to a frenzy of mockery. Sir Johnston is right, there is nn element of impishness in Hnmlet. In happier days he might have made a teas-' Ing, nagging husband for Ophelia. The student who c aided $0000 worth of rrfdlum around iu his vest pocket without knowing either its nature or its worth may congratulate himself that he did not lean up against a soda water counter and break The tube. A dispolch fiom Constantinople by way of Rerlln tells of a plot to depose the sultan of Turkey. There are one or two other pos sible! world events that we might view with lebs calm. - t No matter how unwillingly they acted, the leaders of the miners have done the patri otic thing and deserve credit. It is so much easier to do the flanibojaut than the wine tiling. Anil we venture the belief Hint Uncle Sam will see ta it that the miners get a square deal. j RniRsels stores nre selling women's clothes Imported from London via airplane. Prices are probably 'way up to match the transportation, "I ALWAYS SAIDSKI THAT WE'D MAKE 'mm-mm . Tmmm&ffimmsmmtMa mmm " - m iisssssis 1,rIisakMa 'nof v. mm mfimmmmmfflmmh. .'it ft-fsyijsiy4sMsrlwHJfr''irVrWggilBtt TVAHi1VOfP'J' - -tSHtiSV ,tr, IA ju T tsvmmP&lA!rX'ZiixiT' i 4 sM1 ?sSf &. " slXVJdiHteu "---. ' THESAUCEPAN ' r f commentary j f Lament - . Slumbers The plumber To dream Of the number Of sure-enough Dollars He makes In his sleep. Our baker's A faker ; The smooth Undertaker acks rates To assure us A big Extra weep! The grocer? "Oh, no, sir; It couldn't ' He so, sir!" Cries lie 5 When I say- That his stuff Is too high. The butter-and-egg man Is just a Plain jeggiiinn ! And nil You can do Is to pay up And sigh. Nobody curses The maker v Of v erses. Words aren't enten, - I can't Profiteer. Hut I'll do Like the crew That despoils Me and you And spread it Out thin In the manner Shown here. THE EMPHATIC IDEALIST. Fixing the Furnace Silas Pegg ordered his winter's cool in April, His name was inscribed on pnge Hi of the coal company's order book. On Sep tember 0 he learned that the company had delivered all orders up to page 0. There was possibility then thnt he would receive his ronl late next spiing. Hut it chanced that he knew a chap who had a cousin who was n friend of n man who lind intimate business relations with the proprietor of a delicatessen Btore whose wife was the sister of the junior partner iu n coal firm, nnd he learned thnt by pnyiug cash be could get eight tons of. nut coal within ten days ; nnd he really got It. So when the dnys grew cold he went into the cellar'nnd interviewed the furnace. It was n very niee furnace, big nnd henltfiy looking. Mr. Pegg was proud of it.. .In previous winteis he had fed it well nnil "it had always given him n warm welcome when he paid it n visit. He used to declare that It had no bad habits, that it neither drank nor smoked. Occasionally he would deal It a baud at poker, and the success with which it would draw fairly delighted Mr. Pegg, spite of the fact that he, and he alone, paid for oil the chip. It is true that some mornings after a hot time it had a hoi rid appearance and the glories of the night before were ns nshes in its mouth. And clinkers. Mr. Pegg knew about the clinkers. He was dentlstjo the furnace, and when he surveyed its fine; open countenance he extracted 'most everythingfrom it except satisfaction, When the bnrs were down his vocabulary grew hot. When his vocabulary grew hot the bars were down. For a nou drinker, they had a line collection of burs in thnt cellar, r But that was last winter and the winter before. This winter things were different- Some time in the summer the furnace had con tracted a chill from which it, bad not recor ered; from which it. refused '(o recover," had entirely lost its nppetite, ordinarily largp. Fuel forced upon it lay undigested; lay heavy on its tummy. Nothing but Mr. Pegg's newspapers nnd Mr. Pegg's patience went up in smoke. The wood refused to "catch," though he criss-crossed it pains takingly on top of piles of paper, nnd nfter every little flare-up there -was n drop in coal never reflected in the market reports. So Mr. Pegg at last telephoned the place where they sell heaters, and they said they would send n mnu to give it treatment nt the earliest possible moment; which, of course, meant Hint the Peggs were going to wnit a long, long time. And they did. And the time come nt Inst when Mr. Pegg said he would wnit no longer, nnd Hint the very next afternoon, Saturday,, he was going to pull the "mnnrtls" out of' that furnace and give it n thorough overhauling. ' . Mis. Pegg was alarmed. She knew that Silas had no more mechanical ability thnn n rooster. Anything that was done around the house she had to do. So without say ing n word to anybody she decided to fix that furnace herself, nnd do it before her husband got home. She never would have thought of the over alls if she hadn't seen them negligently re clining on the window screens stored for the winter. The garments hnd been left by the colored mnn who had whitewashed the cellar. He had left hurriedly to accept a position 'ns bellboy in a hotel. As he-was going to wear n gorgeous'unifonn, he didn't have no use for dem t'ings nohow, Aud Mrs. Pegg donned them. The whitewash was a whale of n man aud The poets have compared, a woman to n ship. Well, vyith her sails tucked away Mrs. Pegg looked like a barge, brood in the benm and tight in the seams. That last phrase may not be correctly nautical, but it is descriptive. And this was the moment Fate ordained that the Rev. Edgar- Xossington should make a pastoral call on his parishioners, the Peggs. He knocked nt the front door nnd, getting no reply, wnlked mound to the bock, and came fore to face witH Mrs, Tegg as she carried a pail of ashes up the cellar steps, Mrs. Pegg was embarrassed; so was the pattor. Hut they are both good sports, and instead of trying to pass it off they both laughed. ' I'm really well pleased with the person. One naturally would not expect any stiff ness fiom a woman brave enough to don overalls and tackle n furnnce, but it was somewhat trying for a young clergyman to meet one of the liTB-st dignified members of his .flock, a woman ohl enough to be his mother, masquerading in overalls. That he took it as a mutter of course is greatly to his credit. He went into the cellar with hen examined the furnace nnd snld, "Mrs. Pegg, if you'll take 'em off I'll put them on and jail can boss the job." So Jlrs. Pegg took n tiip upstairs to the kftchen, removed 'em nnd took them down to the preacher, who donned 'em. And they worked nt the furjjace for n full hour and a half and started it, and It worked beauti fully. "How did you fix the cussed thing?" Silas demanded that evening.. "It is not a cussed thing," Raid Mis. Pegg. "It isn't that kind of n furnace at all. It is a w.fll.behaved furnnce; it has been blessed with labor nnd good works." DEMOSTHENES McOlNNIS.' Sir William Osier is II! at his homo iu Oxford, England, which suggests to every paragrnpher in, the world that if he had only said what he was credited with saying some few yen'rs ngo about the duty of every man to shuffle off when he reached forty or was it thirty? why why, bless us, what on excellent paragraph it would make ! The ono redeeming feature of a bad ac cident is thnt It usually brings to the frpnt some hero; and the accident to the, Reading Railway ferryboat was no exception. PROGRESS THERE I" "Whenco Is this, that tho mother of my Ijcrd should come unto me?" TN THE hill country J- Where the streets clomb Ry kirk nnd market There wns my home. There from wise teachers Patience I learned, Waiting till truth be Rightly discerned. Still to thnt teaching Weary I clave, Shall not Messias Mightily save? Then nt that moment. Love's maid wns shown In flic hill-country In n small town. And to the gathered House of my kin Came she, exalted, Suddenly in. i Then snid I: "Whence now Should this thing be " That my Lord's mother Comelh to me?" While in her glory, Near ns she trod, Sang she: "My soul hnth Magnified Ood." Chnrles Williams, in the New Witness. ' The question suggests itself thnt If China is willing to leave the Shantung mat ter to the league of nations, why shouldn't we? What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What is radium? 2. Who was Eugene Scribe? .1. IIow long have the Bolshevists been in power in Russia? 4, Mexico has hnd two emperors? Who were they? 5. Artificial legs have seldom or never been made of cork? Why were they so called? (I. Who is Franklin D, Roosevelt? 7. What was the Minotaur? 8. What is "a laverick in the lift"? 0, What language is sunken In il, ,vi.i of Guadaloupe, in the West Indies? ,, 10. Who wns the great general of King uaviu : Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. To "go to Canossn" means to eat humble pie. Conossa is a town in Italy where Kaiser Heinrich IV wtMit to humble himself before Pv .c Gregory VII (Hildebrand) in 1070. 2. Victor Berger, Socialist congressman from Wisconsin, has been ousted from the House of Rcpresentntives. 3. The mesquite is nn American leguminous tree, especially common in Texas aud New Mexico, 4. The "Ranz des Vnehes" is the Swiss herdsman's melody, mndc of harmonic notes of the Alpine horn. !, A merle Is a blackbird. 0. A round In muBlc is n composition iu which several voices entering nt stated intervals sing the same music, the combination producing correct har mony. 7. Wellington is the capital of New Zea land. 8. Avgowan is a daisy. 0. It is thirty-five years' since the metal in a silver dollar was worth more, as It now is, than the face value of the coin. 10, Thomas a'Kempis wag a German eccle siastic nnd tho reputed author of the ' "Imitation of Chrls.t." His dates are 130V-1471. "-Y, ' V 1 9 S $ i w rs .a, , lE' . - i '.'. r. A.